Literary giant Prof. Chinua
Achebe has stirred the hornets’ nest, with his claim that war-time Head of
State General Yakubu Gowon and the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo formulated
policies that promoted genocide against the Igbo.
In his newly released civil
war memoirs, There was a country, Achebe said: “Almost 30 years before Rwanda,
before Darfur, more than 2 million people-mothers, children, babies,
civilians-lost their lives as a result of the blatantly callous and unnecessary
policies enacted by the leaders of the federal government of Nigeria.”
Quoting the Oxford
Dictionary, the celebrated writer said genocide is “the deliberate and
systematic extermination of an ethnic or national group …The UN General
Assembly defined it in 1946 as …a denial of the right of existence of entire
human groups.”
He said: “Throughout the
conflict, the Biafrans consistently charged that the Nigerians had a design to
exterminate the Igbo people from the face of the earth. This calculation, the
Biafrans insisted, was predicated on a holy jihad proclaimed by mainly Islamic
extremists in the Nigerian Army and supported by the policies of economic
blockade that prevented shipments of humanitarian aid, food and supplies to the
needy in Biafra .”
On Chief Obafemi Awolowo,
who was the Vice Chairman of the Federal Executive Council and Minister of
Defence, Achebe said: “The wartime cabinet of General Gowon, the military
ruler, it should also be remembered, was full of intellectuals, like Chief
Obafemi Awolowo, among others, who came up with a boatload of infamous and
regrettable policies. A statement credited to Awolowo and echoed by his cohorts
is the most callous and unfortunate: all is fair in war, and starvation is one
of the weapons of war. I don’t see why we should feed our enemies fat in order
for them to fight harder’.
“It is my impression that Awolowo was driven by an overriding ambition for power, for himself and for his Yoruba people. There is, on the surface at least, nothing wrong with those aspirations. However, Awolowo saw the dominant Igbo at the time as the obstacles to that goal, and when the opportunity arose with the Nigeria-Biafra war, his ambition drove him into a frenzy to go to hatching up a diabolical policy to reduce the numbers of his enemies Achebe under fire over attack on Awo, Gowon
significantly through
starvation eliminating over two million people, mainly members of future
generations.”
Achebe’s views provoked
anger yesterday.
Reacting yesterday, Mr. Ayo
Opadokun who was Assistant Director of Organisation of the late Chief Awolowo’s
Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) and later Secretary of the National Democratic
Coalition (NADECO), described the Achebe assertion as “typical”.
“It is a reharsh of the
perverted intellectual laziness which he had exhibited in the past in matters
related to Chief Obafemi Awolowo. When Achebe described Awo as a Yoruba
irredentist, what he expected was that Awo should fold his arms to allow the
Igbo race led by Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, to preside over the affairs of the Yoruba
nation,” Opadokun said.
Opadokun pointed out that
some of his colleagues who played prominent roles in liberating Nigeria from
the clutches of military rule, such as Rear Admiral Ndubuisi Kanu (rtd),
Commodore Ebitu Ukiwe (rtd), Dr. Arthur Nwankwo, Alhaji Abulaziz Ude and others
who he described as “men of honour and integrity”, are Igbo. But he found it
difficult to believe that a scholar of Achebe’s stature could be so
unforgiving.
He said, “Let our Igbo
brothers be reminded that about three-quarters of their assets not in the
eastern Region are in Lagos and we have been very
liberal and accommodating. We have allowed them to live undisturbed.”
Senator Biyi Durojaiye
shares Opadokun’s view. He said: “My view is that you don’t expect somebody on
the receiving end of a war to say something pleasant about the winners.
“I don’t share Achebe’s view
that Awolowo did all he did for personal political aggarandisement. It was all
in the process of keeping Nigeria one. What he and General
Gowon did was in the process of preserving the integrity of Nigeria .”
He urged the Igbo to be more
charitable, seeing that both sides of the war are now benefiting from its
outcome. He enjoined all to join hands in facing the challenges of the moment,
insisting that the way to go is for all Nigerians to support a Sovereign
National Conference and restructuring of the polity.
Mr. Jacob Omosanya who
participated actively in Action Group politics as a member of the Action Group
Youth Association AGYA), said Achebe and many of his kinsmen in public life are
tribalistic and “that is what he has exhibited in this new book.”
“It is not new. He canvassed
similar views in The trouble with Nigeria. Dr. Azikiwe and his people
should be grateful to the Yoruba who have always been liberal. When Zik was on
his way back home from the United States, he ran into trouble in the
Gold Coast. It was a team of lawyers led by the late H. O. Davies that saved
him. This is a fact of history that should not be lost on the Igbo.”
Mr. Omosanya said he had expected
that people intellectuals such as Achebe, would be bridge builders and avoid
inflaming passions.
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